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Oral History Interview with Willa V. Robinson,
January 14, 2004. Interview U-0014. Southern Oral History Program
Collection (#4007)Series U. The Long Civil Rights Movement: The South
Since the 1960s. Southern Oral History Program Collection (U-0014)Malinda Maynor139 MbChapel Hill, N. C.Southern Historical Collection, University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill14 January 2004Oral History Interview with Willa V. Robinson,
January 14, 2004. Interview U-0014. Southern Oral History Program
Collection (#4007)Series U. The Long Civil Rights Movement: The South
Since the 1960s. Southern Oral History Program Collection (U-0014)Willa V. Robinson36 p.Southern Historical Collection, University of North Carolina at
Chapel HillChapel Hill, North Carolina14 January 2004Interview conducted on January 14, 2004, by Malinda
Maynor; recorded in Lumberton, North Carolina. Transcribed by Sharon Caughill. Forms part of: Southern Oral History Program Collection
(#4007): Series U. The Long Civil Rights Movement: The South Since the
1960s, Manuscripts Department, University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill.Original transcript on deposit at the Southern
Historical Collection, The Wilson Library, University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill.

The electronic edition is a part of the UNC-Chapel Hill digital library, Documenting the American South.

An audio file with the interview complements this electronic edition.

The text has been encoded using the recommendations for Level 4 of the TEI in
Libraries Guidelines.

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Library of Congress Subject HeadingsDocumenting the American South TopicsEnglishDesegregation North Carolina2006-00-00, Celine Noel and Wanda Gunther revised TEIHeader and created catalog record for the electronic
edition.2006-05-23, Mike Millner finished TEI-conformant encoding and final proofing.
Interview with Willa V. Robinson, January 14, 2004. Interview U-0014.
Conducted by Malinda Maynor

Transcript on deposit at The Southern Historical Collection, The Louis Round
Wilson Library

Citation of this interview should be as follows: “Interview U-0014, in
the Southern Oral History Program Collection #4007, Southern Historical
Collection, The Wilson Library, University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill”

This interview reveals a variety of responses to the integration process in one
southern town. Willa V. Robinson describes the integration process in Maxton,
North Carolina. Robinson, who grew up poor in this small town in eastern North
Carolina, attended all-black schools, and her children were among the last
students in the area to attend segregated schools. The Maxton area has a
significant Native American population, but their presence did not seem to
complicate the integration process or many whites' response to it. Some whites
responded by burning down a black school, but most simply pulled their children
from public schools. The legacy of this flight is underfunded public
schools.

This is tape 01.14.04-WR, an interview with Miss Willa Robinson at the
Center for Community Action in Lumberton, North Carolina. The
interviewer is Malinda Maynor. This is for the Southern Oral History
Program's Long Civil Rights Movement Series. Okay, so Miss Willa, if you
could just start out telling us where you were born and a little bit
about your family, and your early life, and school.

WILLA ROBINSON:

I was born in Maxton, North Carolina in Scotland County, which as
everyone knows Maxton covers two counties. It straddles it, but I was
born in Scotland County in 1930. That was during the Depression when
everybody was equal, really, because there was no little me's and big
you's. Everybody was struggling just to survive.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

How many brothers and sisters did you have?

WILLA ROBINSON:

I don't have any brothers or sisters. I'm the only child. I have a
couple of half-sisters from my father, but my mother, I'm the only
child.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

So were you raised with both your father and your mother?

WILLA ROBINSON:

No, I was raised by my grandparents.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

By your grandparents. Okay. Tell us a little bit about what going to
school was like for you when you were a child.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Well, I didn't realize until in later years how bad off we were for at
that time it was great.

[Laughter.]

WILLA ROBINSON:

Because, as I say, everybody took care of everybody. I'll put it that
way. In the communities there was more of a togetherness than there is
nowadays. All the grown ups that were old enough to be your parents were
allowed to chastise you for whatever. Also, we all lived in houses that
was inadequate, they say now, but at that time they were. We called them
air conditioned in the wintertime because you could feed the chickens
through the cracks in the floor in the kitchen. You'd wake up in the
morning and take the dipper and break the ice in the water bucket.
That's just how cold it would be in your kitchen, and you had to make a
fire in order to heat up. In the winter there'd be one big heater where
you made a fire in there, and you banked it at night so it wouldn't just
completely go out. In the morning you would stoke it up, and add more to
it, and that's where everybody came in to wash up and get dressed. You
didn't walk around in house coat, house shoes and all of this kind of
thing because the house wasn't that comfortable. You hurried up and got
your clothes on. Everyone had their own garden. They had their own
chickens. A few had a cow, and everybody had hogs. You didn't buy a lot
of things from the store, so that's why I say we were poor, but we
didn't realize it. As a matter of fact, I didn't even know that I was
black and I was poor until it was told to me in high school.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Wow.

[Laughter.]

WILLA ROBINSON:

I didn't, because those things we didn't think about.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Everybody around you was black?

WILLA ROBINSON:

No.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

No.

WILLA ROBINSON:

There was Indian and white.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

And everybody.

WILLA ROBINSON:

But nobody ever talked about what color you were, and we all visited
each other's homes. We played with each other's children, and nobody
said anything about the race thing. It just wasn't talked about, and
nobody made you feel inferior in my neighborhood. But as I say, once I
got to high school is when I found out that I was poor and I was
black.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

So what elementary school did you go to?

WILLA ROBINSON:

I went to Maxton, it was called Robeson County Training School.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

And it was an all black school?

WILLA ROBINSON:

Um-hum.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Okay. So then where did you go to high school? Maxton?

WILLA ROBINSON:

Same school.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Okay. So, right. Well it says here—.

WILLA ROBINSON:

At that time they called it primer grade. Now they've got kindergarten,
but it was primer grades through eleven, the whole school.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Right, okay.

WILLA ROBINSON:

You didn't go from one school to the next school like they do now.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Right.

WILLA ROBINSON:

In the same place that R. B. Dean Elementary School is now, that was
where what they called it, the colored school.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Did that ever occur to you that you didn't go to school with these
Indian and white children that you played with or that your family
visited with? Did that occur to you?

WILLA ROBINSON:

No, it just seemed the way things were, that you played together, and
you helped each other as far as what you needed in the home, or if
someone got sick you went to their house and you'd sit with them, and
like that, but when it came to school and church, you went to your
church, and I went to mine. You went to your school, and I went to
mine.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

So when you say you were born in Scotland County, did you sort of grow
up sort of on the outskirts of Maxton or was it in town that your
grandparents were?

WILLA ROBINSON:

No. Do you know anything about Maxton?

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Not really.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Well, anyway, when you leave Lumberton, Highway 74 and you get almost to
Maxton. Now that they got a bypass going around. It goes right straight
down through Maxton. The stop light's here, and about a block and a half
from the stop light on the other side is Scotland County, and about a
half a mile from there I was born.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Okay.

WILLA ROBINSON:

In Scotland County. So it really was just as close into town as—

MALINDA MAYNOR:

As any place, any place in Robeson County.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Right.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Right.

WILLA ROBINSON:

That's the way it's situated, the town is situated.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Did you run into differences that you remember between some of the
people that grew up in the county and grew up in the town? Were there, I
don't know, economic differences or attitude differences that you
remember?

WILLA ROBINSON:

Yeah, cause even though I was just, we call it blocks now, but maybe
about a mile from the main part of the town, I was considered country.
And the kids that was within the city limits, I'll say, yeah, that made
a difference when it came to school. But the only difference was they
had less than we did.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Hum.

WILLA ROBINSON:

I found that out later though, because I used to trade my sausage
biscuit for a peanut butter and jelly sandwich with stale bread, so you
know I was a little stupid.

[laughter]

WILLA ROBINSON:

But my grandmother didn't buy bread.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

She made it.

WILLA ROBINSON:

She made corn bread and she made biscuits. Those was the two breads that
you got, one or the other, for breakfast, lunch, or dinner. That's what
you got. But the city kids, they had their own light bread as we called
it back then, and peanut butter and jelly. That's what they'd have for
lunch. And I'd have a nice juicy sausage biscuit. Well, I got it all the
time so it wasn't no great big deal to me, so I'd trade my sausage
biscuit for a peanut butter and jelly sandwich.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

That's interesting.

WILLA ROBINSON:

And we even brought milk to school, a little pint of milk. We'd bring
our own milk to drink. The first tooth I remember losing, I drank it
with my milk for lunch. I was so afraid I wouldn't
let nobody pull it. That day at lunch time after I'd finished eating and
drank my milk I realized my tooth was gone.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

So in the colored schools as they called it, the county and the city
children went to the same school?

WILLA ROBINSON:

Yeah, um-hum.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Was that true of the white schools and the Indian schools that you
remember?

WILLA ROBINSON:

Well, it's according to how far out in the country you lived.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Okay.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Because they had little schools out in different areas that did not come
to this main school until they was in eighth grade. Once they completed
eighth grade then they came. This was the school that everybody came to.
But we had schools out at Floral College. We had schools in Shannon. We
had schools in Wakulla. We had schools in Piney Grove, Alma, Evans
Crossing, and all these little different places around Maxton. Midway
was another one that had the one room schools that took care of them
first grade all the way through the eighth grade. Then when you go to
eighth grade you came to Robeson County Training School or had buses.
Buses brought them in from the country. See, by me only living like
maybe a mile from the town I was like a go between, and I didn't have to
go to those smaller schools to begin with.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

I see.

WILLA ROBINSON:

I went to the main schools from the beginning.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

So talk about high school then when you first realized that you were
black and poor. What was it that—?

WILLA ROBINSON:

Well, at one time I had a pretty good voice, at least they said I did. I
always sang alto, and we had a glee club. I know you've heard of glee
clubs.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

I used to sing in one.

WILLA ROBINSON:

We had a glee club, and we was very excited about it. This white
girl—backing up on the story a bit. This white girl that had played with
me all my life in my neighborhood, her daddy had a store in my
neighborhood. Played with me, even spent nights at my house. I spent
nights at her house when we were growing up. She's the one that made me
realize that I was different. What happened was, we were invited over to
the white school to sing a program. Well, we got there maybe thirty
minutes before time, and we all was in the back, in the auditorium
behind the curtains. She was standing there talking to a friend of hers,
a white friend. I walked up to her and tapped her like that, "Hey Sarah
Lib," because her name was Sarah Elizabeth, but we called her Sarah Lib.
She didn't say anything. So I tapped her. I said, "What's wrong, you
don't know nobody anymore?" I said, "This is Willa." I said, "Hey Sarah
Lib." She said, "Come here a minute." She excused herself from this
other girl, and she called me over in the corner. I was thinking there
was some juicy gossip that she wants to tell me, because you know, when
you're thirteen, fourteen that's all you know is gossip. I said, "What's
the matter?" She said, "I've got something to tell you." I said, "What
is it?" She said, "My daddy say I can't play with you no more, and I
can't go to your house no more. I cannot associate with you no more
because you're black, and he don't want me to associate with no black
people." I says, "Oh, really? I done changed colors." I said, "I was
this color all the time." She said, "I know." She said, "It ain't my
fault." She said, "I don't want you to be angry with
me, but I have to do what my father says." I says, "Fine with me," but
it broke my heart. But I said to her, I said, "Fine with me." So that's
when I realized that I was black, and she was white, and we could not be
friends any longer because her parent's wouldn't allow it.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

How did that affect you after that?

WILLA ROBINSON:

It put a stigma on me, really, it did. But I guess my grandmother
carried me though at lot of the bad things that was said and done to you
as I was growing up because my grandmother was white. She carried me
through a lot of things. She always told me, "Don't ever let anybody
make you feel inferior," she said, "because they can't do it without
your consent." I've never forgotten that. She says, "You've got to
consent to it." She said, "So, her daddy don't want her to deal with you
any longer. That doesn't make you any different. That doesn't make you
be any less, and it doesn't make her be any more, but it's just one of
the lessons that you have to learn as you're going on, that there are
always going to be prejudiced people." Then she started telling me
stories about how she used to have to sit on the porch at night with the
gun to protect my grandfather from the Ku Klux Klan because he was
black. They wouldn't bother her, but they wanted him. And they'd tell
her, "Why are you always sitting on the porch? We came after Emanuel. We
don't want you." She'd tell them, "Well, you have to come by me first."
Then one got smart and says, "You can't kill us all." She said, "No, but
I got two shells in this double barrel shotgun, and at least two of them
will be down when it's over." They never bothered her, but he had to
work on the farm during the day so he couldn't sit up all night dealing
with Ku Klux Klan coming over.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

She sounds like an amazing person.

WILLA ROBINSON:

She was to me.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

She was a strong influence on you.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Yeah, very, very.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Was she raised in Robeson County here, too, or the Scotland Robeson
area?

WILLA ROBINSON:

Um-hum. Yeah.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

And your grandfather as well?

WILLA ROBINSON:

He was from South Carolina.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Okay. That's like a lot of our people, Indian people, too, came to this
area from South Carolina. Well, tell us about the rest of your high
school education. I saw on there that you had gotten a GED.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Well, I did like a lot of young girls. I thought I was in love, and I
got married when I was in the eleventh grade, and I did not get my
diploma. I wasn't pregnant, but in those days if a young lady got
pregnant or got married before she got her diploma, you didn't get it.
They cut it off. Now days if you're pregnant you can go back and get
your diploma. You can even get married and finish your schooling, but
back then you couldn't. So that's what kept me from getting a diploma
from the school. I decided I wanted to get married. Big mistake, but we
all make them, don't we?

MALINDA MAYNOR:

We sure do.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Then again, this wasn't such a great one because the two children that I
have came from that marriage. That's the only two that I ever had.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Is your son the oldest?

WILLA ROBINSON:

Um-hum.

WILLA ROBINSON:

When was he born?

WILLA ROBINSON:

Where?

MALINDA MAYNOR:

When.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Oh, forty-seven.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Nineteen forty-seven. Okay. So then you got involved in the school
system in the 1950s then, pretty early. Tell us then some of the early
things you remember about working with your children in the schools.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Well, both of my kids graduated from a segregated school. They had not
integrated the schools yet, because my son had graduated in sixty-seven,
and my daughter she graduated in sixty-nine. As a matter of fact my
daughter's class was the last all black class from—and they had changed
their name from Robeson County Training School to R. B. Dean, because I
didn't tell you that part. When they integrated the schools the white
people in Maxton burned down the black school, and they had to rebuild
another school. After that last class, as I say, of blacks went out in
sixty-nine, then that's when they changed it to an elementary school,
and they built Townsend Middle School.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Right.

WILLA ROBINSON:

For, I guess around four years, blacks and whites went to the all-white
high school

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Which is Maxton High School.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Yeah, Maxton High School. They all went to that school.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Do you remember what year that was when they started going there?

WILLA ROBINSON:

They integrated in, I believe it was 1970. I think it was until
seventy-five they all went to this Maxton High School. Then they claimed
that this high school was too old, and it was too
dilapidated. You know what I'm saying. They were saying that it was
outdated, and that's when they all come together with this business
about putting the school out here in the middle of nowhere, Purnell
Swett.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Purnell Swett.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Yeah.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

It was West Robeson at that time.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Yeah, um-hum, I wasn't able to understand that, because it was the first
time in my life that I'd heard of a school they'd named after a person,
and they're still living. I thought you did it after death, but I got a
wake up call.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Not in Robeson County.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Anyway, there was a big discrepancy on that because from the
beginning—Maxton held out for quite a while. They wanted their school on
[Highway] 130 like going towards Rowland. There was a big area out there
owned by Buddy Dunn that he had said he would donate for a high school.
But our officials, I don't know what happened, but they gave in because
they was asking all the different towns to come together for this big
school. Just my opinion—it was the worst mistake they ever made because
Lumberton held out. Red Springs held out, so they got their own high
school, but the other towns that didn't go to Purnell Swett is going to
South Robeson, as you know. And it's just too many kids in one
place.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Yeah. Let's go back a little bit to when the first sort of rumblings, I
guess, about having to desegregate the schools began. When was that in
Maxton? When did people first talk about it? Do you remember?

WILLA ROBINSON:

The biggest talk about it was like in maybe sixty-seven.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

What brought it on?

WILLA ROBINSON:

They started to talk about it. They were having meetings, really, about
this. There were, some diehards, prejudice white people in Maxton, that
would rather die than see it happen. It's a funny thing. A sad story.
It's true, but it's sad. We had a teacher, a white teacher, Mr.—I won't
give his name—in Maxton that had two children going to school. In a
public town meeting he said he'd rather see his kids dead than to see
them in school with a nigger. That's the way he said it. And the sad
part about this, when they got out for Christmas holidays, guess what?
Both of his kids got killed in an accident, and he was driving the car.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Oh, gosh.

WILLA ROBINSON:

His wife, she just completely lost it, became a mental case. But you
have to be real careful what you say out your mouth, because I wouldn't
have wished that on him in no kind of way even though he was saying it
against my people. I wouldn't have wished that on him. But he said it,
and this happened, and then people say there's no God. There is a God.
There is a God. It's terrible. We had quite a few, I'll say prominent
folk in Maxton, that we didn't even know or had no thoughts that they
were members of Ku Klux Klan until the riot that they had. What was it,
in 1957?

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Um-hum.

WILLA ROBINSON:

That's when we found out a lot of them, we call them the bigwigs of
Maxton, was really Ku Klux Klansmen because they ran so hard they ran
right out of their white sheets, and everybody knew who they were.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

That's right. How did African-Americans feel about that?

WILLA ROBINSON:

We loved it. We loved it.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

This time I'm just going to say for the tape recorder that we're talking
about the 1957, or eight, rout I guess, of the Klan.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Yeah. It was a Klan rally they was proposing to have, and this
prejudiced man, as I said, let them have this area around here, Gaddy's
Mill, and the word got around. They wasn't out in the open, but a lot of
black folk contributed to that clash that went on because they kept the
Indian people in Pembroke aware of what was going on, and when it was
going on, and how it was planned, and got it all together. And on that
big night it exploded, so everybody was happy.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Um-hum. It did seem to benefit everybody, but African-Americans have
never gotten credit.

WILLA ROBINSON:

No, but there were a lot of them in the background that really helped
with the communications, letting them know what's going on, and who's
doing what, and where they're going to be, and what time they're going
to be there, and nobody paid them any attention because they felt like,
"Hey, we don't have to worry about them." But, as I told you earlier, up
until I'll say the last thirty years blacks and Indians were together.
After Martin Luther King—it's like I tell a lot of them now—Martin
Luther King didn't just help black folk, he helped all poor folk, Indian
and white, whether people want to realize it or not. With the
integration that he talked about, it helped them, too, as well as us,
and that's when the white man started putting the wedge between the
blacks and the Indians saying, "You don't deal with them because you are
better than them."

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Saying that to the Indians?

WILLA ROBINSON:

Yes. Because they felt like if we stayed together as we were back in the
30s and the 40s we could take over because we'd be so strong. There's
strength in numbers, so what is their motto? Divide and conquer.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Right. Would you go back a little bit and talk about the 30s and the 40s
and how Indians and blacks were, what kinds of things they were doing
together, what it really meant?

WILLA ROBINSON:

Well, we worked on the farms together. We nourished each other's
children together. We took care of each other's sick folk. We visited
each other's homes. We were just, we were a community. It wasn't them
Indian people stay over there, and those black folks stay over there,
and they never come together, but we all came together on everything. I
remember Miss Edith Locklear. She had some boys. They liked to drink. On
Saturday afternoon they would come by our house. You're a young lady so
you don't know. They called it a Hoover buggy. It was a little buggy. It
had two wheels on it like car wheels on it, but it was a little seat up
on the top. The horse pulled it. They called it a Hoover buggy. Just as
they'd get by our house there was the railroad tracks. And when they'd
go across the railroad tracks they'd be so high that when they hit the
railroad track they'd fall off the Hoover buggy and this horse would go
on home which wasn't too far up from our house. My grandpa and my
grandma would go out there and help them out of the ditch, bring them
home to our house, give them black coffee and all kinds of things to try
to get them together before they'd send them home. Then my grandpapa,
he'd go home with them. He said, "Let me take these boys on up to Edith
because I know she's wondering. I've seen the mule
up there for I don't know how long, and they's sitting down here," and
take them home.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

So there was a lot of collaboration and cooperation?

WILLA ROBINSON:

Yeah, yeah. As I say, it was like a community should be. You were
concerned about what happens to me. I'm concerned about what happens to
you. If there was anything going wrong at your house, hey, I'm hurting
too. You know, that's the way things were, really. We didn't have too
many white neighbors. As I say, the only white family we had in our
neighborhood at that time was this child I was talking about. Her father
had a little store where he sold little groceries which wasn't a lot
because most people raised their own. The only things we bought from the
store was coffee, sugar, and rice.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

So your grandparents ran a farm? That was their main occupation?

WILLA ROBINSON:

Yeah, and my grandma would put things—at that time we didn't have
freezers. They canned everything. She canned a lot of vegetables during
the summer, and then they'd kill hogs in the fall, and they had a smoke
house full of meat. They had chickens on the yard. A few turkeys, and
plenty of hogs.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

So what do you think made you want to get so involved in your children's
education and the school system?

WILLA ROBINSON:

I just had a feeling that I needed to be there. You know, from the very
beginning because my grandmother, she had a stroke when I was like
seven, eight years old. She didn't come to the school, but she'd always
ask the teacher or the principal to stop by to see her so she could find
out first hand what was going on with me at the school house, if you
know what I mean. When I grew up my thoughts were, "I jumped up and got married just before graduating. I didn't
get a college education, but I'm going to do my best to see that my
children get everything that they are capable of." And I learned a
saying, "You can lead a horse to water, but you can't make him drink."
Well, my motto was, "If you hold his head under water long enough he'll
either drink it or drown."

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Right. That sounds like my parents.

WILLA ROBINSON:

So the only way that I could see that this happened was to be right
there, to find out how much homework you got. Let me see your homework.
If you need me to help you, you can holler, you know, be available. And
as they got older, like I tell everybody now, "Don't drop your child
when it gets in middle school. That's when they need you most." Because
the peer pressure in middle school is horrendous. Nobody knows but the
child. So don't drop them off, and forget them, and feel like they can
make it. You need to stay right with that child from the first day of
school until the graduation from the high school through the graduation
of the college. You need to be there. If the child goes away from home
for college you still can be a part of what goes on with them. You can
visit the college, and you can let them know that you are behind them
and what you expect of them. And you'd be surprised. They usually come
through for you, but it takes a lot from you. You can't just expect it
to happen by doing nothing. You have a part to do also.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

What kinds of conditions did you find your children in during their
elementary, and middle school, and high school years? What was the
school like, and how did it compare with the other schools in the area?

WILLA ROBINSON:

Well it was just the normal things that I felt like that happened in
school is there were some teachers that really was concerned, and there
was some that was just there for the job. There
were bullies that would be picking on your children, and then there were
others that you would love for your child to be friends with because
they wanted to do something in life, and that's what you wanted your
child to do also. But you had to be like a steering committee in the
background. You couldn't just come out and say, "I don't want you
dealing with so, and so, and so. I want you to deal with so and so." You
couldn't say that, but you were like a little steering committee in the
back, you know. You don't force them, you just nudge them a little bit.
Nudge them a little bit until you get them to where you want them to be.
And I never let my children hang out in the street. My mother didn't let
me hang out in the street. I didn't let mine either. Nuh-huh. We always
had chores. When I was growing up you had chores. When you come from
school you had to get in wood. You had to get in coal, water, maybe even
sweep the yards or whatever. Feed the chickens. Feed the hogs, but there
was something that you had to do. Once it got dark you come inside. You
ate your dinner. We called it supper at that time. You got out your
homework, and you went to bed. That was your day. So when my kids came
along things were a little better, and they didn't have as many chores
as I had when I was growing up, but I made sure that they had enough
that they didn't have a lot of idle time because grandma said, "Idle
mind is the devil's workshop," so you have to keep them busy. I think
that's what happens to a lot of our children today. They don't have
enough to keep them occupied. The parents buy all the conveniences for
them, and they're out there working trying to pay for all of this, and
what the child really wants is the mama, not what she can buy for him.
Because, you know, you think about it. Come home from school, you have a
lot of latchkey kids we call them. They come home from school. There's nobody there but the television, so
whatever's on there, they watch it. You buy HBO. They watch HBO. You
watch Cinemax. They can watch Cinemax. And the same thing with the
computer. There is a lot of pornography on the computer. You don't want
them to see these things, don't have it there available for them.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Yeah. Was it all black teachers at the school when your kids were going
there?

WILLA ROBINSON:

Yeah, and the principal, too.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Um-hum. Did you find yourself looking around and saying, "Well, we don't
have such and such that the white school has, or this other thing that
the white school has?" Or was that not even really an issue?

WILLA ROBINSON:

I heard the teachers talking about the different things that we did not
have, but if it was the children we just made do with what we had. We
didn't get to visit the other schools to make a comparison.

[laughter]

WILLA ROBINSON:

But the teachers did because they'd have the teacher's meeting, or
whatever. They'd have to go over there for one reason or another, and
they would see what was going on, but we, as children, we didn't see
that.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

In the 1960s it sounds like white parents were organizing against
integration.

WILLA ROBINSON:

They were.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

What were black parents doing or thinking about as all these issues came
up?

WILLA ROBINSON:

Praying a lot.

[laughter]

WILLA ROBINSON:

Because first of all, in the town of Maxton what they started doing
automatically even before the integration got there was some of them
didn't have cash money. They were selling parts of their land and
properties to get cash money to send their child to a private school.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

These are white parents?

WILLA ROBINSON:

And them that had money automatically started investigating the nearest
private school they could send their child to. So by the time that
schools was really integrated and they started going to school together,
the only people mostly at school was Indian and black. They had done
weeded their children out beforehand. You might find one, two, or maybe
three white kids in the elementary school. But by the time they got to
middle school or high school they was in a private school. They was not
in the public schools any longer.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

What were some of the private schools around here?

WILLA ROBINSON:

The closest one was Flora McDonald.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

In Red Springs?

WILLA ROBINSON:

In Red Springs.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Did Rowland have one or Fairmont?

WILLA ROBINSON:

If it did, I don't know about it.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Okay. So the black parents were praying for it to happen.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Um-hum.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Were there any blacks that you remember that resisted it, that didn't
want it to happen?

WILLA ROBINSON:

No, not really. Not really. Because their hopes was everybody would be
on an equal scale as far as education was concerned because we knew that
we were on the bottom rung when it came to materials for education, so
they felt like if it was integrated my child would get the same quality
education as your child would get because we'd have the same tools. But
we find out now that the schools are integrated they're still not giving
us the tools we need.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Are those tools still kept for schools like Lumberton High School and—?

WILLA ROBINSON:

Yeah.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

—and predominantly white schools?

WILLA ROBINSON:

Um-hum.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

And how does that system work?

WILLA ROBINSON:

The public schools just is not getting it. It's not getting it. I'm not
a gambling person of any sort, but I just feel like our legislators are
keeping us down to a point because you've got the lottery in Virginia.
You've got it in South Carolina, and they just finally got it in
Tennessee. We are surrounded, and the great things that they're doing in
South Carolina with the lottery as far as education is concerned is
tremendous. They're talking about it all the time. And then they're
talking about how poor Robeson County schools are. They don't have this,
and they don't have that, and they can't get the money from the
government, because they don't have it to give to us. So why not? There
are people who are going to gamble no matter what. Instead of those that
live in North Carolina going to South Carolina, or going to Tennessee,
or going to Virginia, leave it here, and let it help our children
because they really need it. But they don't see it like that. Who was
that? Somebody told me, "Well, we'll never get a lottery because you know this is the Bible Belt." I says, "The Bible
Belt has got nothing to do with it. It has nothing to do with your
religion. There are people that live maybe next door to you that don't
ever pick up a bible or even go to a church, and don't even care one way
or the other, but they will go and play the lottery. So you have to use
these tools, whatever ones you can get, to better the situation for your
children."

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Not everybody wants to better it, it sounds like.

WILLA ROBINSON:

No, no. I think they want us to stay in a rut. You get too many smart
people you might root them out of their little spot.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

When they start demanding higher wages, and benefits, and things like
that.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Yeah. Yeah.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Well, let's go back a little bit to the 60s again, and tell me about
some of the things that you were doing in Maxton to push this issue
forward. Did you have meetings? Was it a formal sense of being organized
in that way, or what kinds of things were happening?

WILLA ROBINSON:

Well, we were having meetings at our church, at the church, about the
situation. The meeting we had at the church was mainly about
getting—once they were into school integrated already—was getting a high
school in Maxton instead of having to come all the way down, be bused
down to Pembroke to school. But as I say, it was like mainly among the
citizens of Maxton and the city officials of Maxton because at that time
all our city officials was white. We only got integrated here in the
last few years. They all was white. And, as I told you before, they all
had sent their children to private schools. So they wasn't interested in
having a high school in Maxton. It was okay with them if they build one
big school, and herd them all around in one place. It didn't matter. So it really was a time of feeling hopeless. I
wouldn't say hopeless, helpless to a certain extent.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Fighting against the system.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Right, because we didn't have anybody in our stead to speak up, that,
"Yeah, we need this, and we need that." It seemed like it was just a
time of turmoil and stress with everybody.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

And so at that time was there still a Maxton City administrative unit
for the schools? Were there still Maxton City Schools as opposed to the
Robeson County pubic schools?

WILLA ROBINSON:

Um-hum, but they were all white.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Um-hum. So the Maxton City Schools were all white.

WILLA ROBINSON:

The Maxton City Schools committee was all white.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

I see. The board was all white.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Um-hum.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Okay. Go back and tell us about when they burned down the black high
school because I mentioned that to somebody that I work with on this
project a couple of weeks ago, and they were like, "What?" They hadn't
really hard of anything like that happening in North Carolina.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Oh, really?

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Yeah. So tell us from what you remember, kind of from beginning to end,
who was involved with that, why it got to that level?

WILLA ROBINSON:

Well, as you know, the riot was in fifty-seven.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Which riot, the KKK?

WILLA ROBINSON:

Yeah, right. The schools were burned down in, I think it was sixty-nine.
Nope, it wasn't sixty-nine. I'm getting old. These things kind of get to
my head. Now see, my daughter's class was the last class at the black
school. That was in sixty-nine. She graduated in 1969. Yeah. No. She
graduated in sixty-nine or sixty-eight. I can't remember.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

That's okay. We're dealing with that time. It was after she graduated.

WILLA ROBINSON:

That the schools were burned down.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

That the schools were burned down.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Yeah, and they said it—

[END OF TAPE 1, SIDE A]

[TAPE 1, SIDE B]

[START OF TAPE 1, SIDE B]

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Okay, tell us again. You think it was after your daughter graduated.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Yeah.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

So they had decided to integrate the schools at that point.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Yeah.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

So where did the next class of high schools go, the next class of high
school students?

WILLA ROBINSON:

Went to the white high school.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

In Maxton.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Yeah. That was the only high school after they had burned down R. B.
Dean. I mean Robeson County Training School.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Do you remember what time of year it happened?

WILLA ROBINSON:

It was like in July or August. It was just before school started. At
that time school used to start right after Labor Day, but it was either
July or August that they burned the school down. They said it was a
bunch of young white boys, but they never was persecuted [prosecuted]
for it.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Okay. So they had already decided to close the school and have students
begin attending the white high school?

WILLA ROBINSON:

No, they really hadn't gotten into the particulars about how they was
going to do it, and why. It was a puzzle to me and a lot of other black
folk. Why would they burn the school down if they were against
integration? Leave the school there, and you've got a better opportunity
of keeping them over there. But for some uncanny reason they burned it
down. They could have just been frustrated. The young teenagers didn't
know what to do with themselves, and listening to all this integration
stuff from their parents in their home, with their parents talking, and
not ever being exposed to having to sit in a classroom with other colors
of children, or whatever, and they could have just got all mixed up and
confused, and said, "Well, we'll fix it. We'll go burn the school down."
You never know, and we'll never know, I guess, what really went through
their minds at the time. The logical thinking to me was, "You don't want
me at your school, why are you going to burn down mine? Let me keep it."
I don't know. I really don't know.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Well tell me, because part of what we're trying to do is get a
chronology, sort of, of the events in each place, did anybody in Maxton
that you remember participate in the freedom of choice program that
Robeson County had in the mid 60s, I guess, sixty-five, sixty-six.
That's when I'm talking about this freedom of choice program. Is that
something you remember?

WILLA ROBINSON:

If they did, I don't know anything about it.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Okay. Okay. So what we're taking about then is basically something that
occurs in the Maxton City School System.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Um-hum.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

And you did have black students from the county technically who were
attending the city schools?

WILLA ROBINSON:

Yeah.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

So these decisions about integration affected the county students as
well as the city students?

WILLA ROBINSON:

Right. Right.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Did the whites in Maxton try to take the case to court, or just—what
exactly did they try to do to stop it?

WILLA ROBINSON:

No, they didn't go to take it to court. They just started moving their
children out. They didn't move themselves, but they'd moved their
children to private schools.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

So they saw it, and said, "We're going to—."

WILLA ROBINSON:

Like an undercurrent, you know. "Well, we can't stop this. It's going to
happen anyway. We killed Martin Luther King. That didn't help. We killed
Kennedy. That didn't help. Then we come back and got Robert. That didn't
help, so we're just going to move all the kids out to private schools."

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Right.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Then they didn't have to worry about it. To me I feel like they gave up
on the public schools, but they figured, "Well, our kids are not going
to be in there anyway, so we're not going to worry
about it. Let the Indians and the blacks fight it out. That will be
their school." So in a way it's still segregation because I don't think
there's not one white child at Purnell Swett, is there?.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Not many.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Is there some?

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Well, there must be some, but not many.

WILLA ROBINSON:

I don't know of any from Maxton that went there.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

There may not be. There may not be. I know there's some at Red Springs.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Unless they're to an inter-marriage couple or something, where one
parent is white and one is black, or one parent is Indian and one is
white, like that.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Children with white parents. Yeah, I don't know. That would be a good
thing to find out though.

WILLA ROBINSON:

That would be good to find out. In my thoughts, because I'm thinking, I
could be wrong, but there are none there.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Well, that certainly seems consistent with what the county schools were
doing. They were trying to leave the issue to fight between Indians and
Blacks, to fight it out essentially. And that seems to have been the
logic behind setting up Purnell Swett where it was and the schools that
fed into it, Pembroke, and Prospect, and Maxton. You're going to have a
definite minority of white kids coming from those three high schools.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Right.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

I find it interesting though that as of 1969 when your daughter
graduated, they really hadn't sorted out where these kids were going to
go. The just knew that they had to go somewhere,
and then burning down the black high school meant that they had to go to
the white high school.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Yeah. What' I'm saying, I don't know, it just sounds kind of confusing.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Yeah, sure. Sure. Crazy.

WILLA ROBINSON:

If you don't want me over at your house, why burn down my house? That
was my point.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

What do you remember about how the black community felt when the school
was burned down?

WILLA ROBINSON:

Well, they were devastated because really, I think, a lot of the
prominent blacks in the town was hoping that they could include that
school in the process. You know what I'm saying?

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Um-hum.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Instead of having to build the middle school over there, Townsend Middle
School, in some way or another they could use that building for one of
the schools. They knew already there was going to be a elementary
school, a middle school, and a high school and a lot of them thought
because really the white high school, the building part, and the black
high school, the building part, the black school really was bigger
because we had from first grade all the way through twelfth grade. The
white high school only had from eighth grade through eleven. So their
school really wasn't as big, the size wasn't as big. I think they was
just still in the process of trying to decide if we can at least include
this school in it. Use it. Put it to use. I don't know if you ever heard
of the Rosenwalds? They built all of those black schools back in the
30s, and Robeson County Training School was one of them.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Oh, is that right?

WILLA ROBINSON:

Um-hum.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Okay. What about some of the differences. It's interesting that you
mentioned some of the leadership in the black community in Maxton. Did
you find economic differences or other things that caused disagreements,
differences of opinion, maybe, in the black community about how these
things should be handled and what should happen with integration?

WILLA ROBINSON:

No, as I said, the ones that I knew, that I got any feedback from was
willing for the integration, but they wanted it to be on an even basis.
You know what I'm saying.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Right.

WILLA ROBINSON:

They felt that it would be better, it would make it better for the black
children if the school was integrated so that they could get the equal
opportunity in education.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

So it makes sense for that to happen, for the new unified school to be
the Training School.

WILLA ROBINSON:

I was one of those that believed that for the simple reason—. My son
graduated from the all black school, and he wanted to be a doctor. Well,
first of all they wouldn't let him in at, I think it was a college up in
Charlotte. I can't think of the name now. But anyway, what they did to
him, they accepted him without him going there. They didn't see him. Two
weeks before time for school to open I took him for his interview. When
they realized he was black they cut him off just like that. Now, it's
two weeks before college is opening up to start. This lady, I'll always
remember her, Miss McDuffie. You might have heard about Laurinburg
Institute?

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Um-hum.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Well, Miss McDuffie was one of the founders. She helped me by her being
an educator and knowing people to get my son in Howard University in two
weeks. She made a few phone calls to a few prominent people at that
school, and three days before the school was opened she called me. She
says, "Get Fred ready and have him at Howard University," at
such-and-such a time, at such-and-such a place. "He has been accepted."
He was accepted, because he told me, "Mama, if you just get me in there
I won't let you down. I won't let you down." He even talks about it now
because he does a lot of public speaking, how far back in time our
schools were from the modern schools of that day because he was in
school with kids from all parts of the country, even some came from
other countries to this medical school. He said, the things that he had
to learn and catch up to in college, they already did it in high school.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Wow.

WILLA ROBINSON:

They already did it in high school, so while they were out enjoying
themselves he was burning the midnight oil trying to keep up. He said it
was like he didn't go to school. But, yet, when he graduated from
Robeson County Training School he was an honor student. He was what they
call a cum laude something or other. You know what those two things are.
He was all A's, an all A student. He said he went to Howard University
and it was like he was the dumbest thing in the world because a lot of
things that those children that was there with him had already done in
high school, they didn't even give it to him when he was in high school.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Right.

WILLA ROBINSON:

They didn't have, I guess, the tools or the financial facilities. He
said he really had to work his butt off just to stay even. He says, "Not
ahead of the class, mama, just even." He said when the other kids had
time to go out and party and enjoy themselves on the weekend, he says,
"I was burning the midnight oil. I was catching up to make sure because
I had promised you if you got me there, I wasn't going to get throwed
out." So that was another thing to let me know that our schools was
below par, that they needed a lot of improvement, because that's a
devastating thing for a child to feel like, "Hey, I'm smart. I'm getting
all A's," and you go to the next level, and they say, "All A's for what?
Did you do so-and-so, or did you do such-and-such." "We didn't do that
at our school." "Well, you gotta get it."

MALINDA MAYNOR:

That's right. Did a number of blacks from Maxton go to college? Was that
a common experience?

WILLA ROBINSON:

No, not a lot.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

So people weren't bringing back—.

WILLA ROBINSON:

They wasn't giving any feedback.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Yeah.

WILLA ROBINSON:

At least to where I didn't know about it until my children started going
to college. That's when I got the feedback from what was going on, that
our schools wasn't what I thought they was. Even with my staying out
there, practically, at school, and trying to keep up with what was going
on, and this, that, and the other, our schools still was below par. They
wasn't up to snuff.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

So how do you feel about integration now looking back on it? Is it a
success? Is it a failure? What would you say about it?

WILLA ROBINSON:

I feel like integration is a success, but I feel like our educational
system has deteriorated because during my time teachers were dedicated.
I mean they were dedicated. They would go to all kinds of lengths to
make sure that that child succeeded, and I'm sure that we still have
some with that same frame of mind, but the majority is, it's a job. Like
I got to work this morning. I do so, and so, and so. When I get off,
forget it. I'm done with it. And you can't do that if you want to really
be an educator. An educator's got to be with it 24/7. That's my thought.
But, yeah, I don't see anything that went wrong with the integration,
it's just the attitudes of the faculties that we have nowadays.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

That's something that affects you no matter what race you are or class.

WILLA ROBINSON:

It doesn't matter because if that teacher is dedicated she's going to
let you know if something's going on with your child. The reason I said
that, it wasn't me but a couple of folk that lived in back of me had
children in school at Purnell Swett, and they didn't even know their
child had been in-school suspension for two long weeks. And they didn't
even know it, and the child failed. That was how they found out. And
what happened is, they didn't send her a note home. The child's in high
school so they figured the child is supposed to go home and tell the
parents. Now, you know, any child that knows that their parent is on
their case is not going to go home and tell them bad news. What's wrong
with making a phone call? If you can't travel make a phone call to that
parent, and tell them, "Your child is suspended. They're coming to
school every day, but they're in in-school suspension for the next two
weeks." What's wrong with that? But they don't do that. You child can be
in in-school suspension and out, and you don't know
nothing about it unless that child so desires to tell you. And I feel
like that's up to the faculty to let the parent know. And that's the
difference in the new school and the old school. The old school, the
teacher came to your house. The principal came to your house, bar none.
And if you did something wrong in school, you know who brought you home?
The principal.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

They caught you.

WILLA ROBINSON:

He brought you home. But now they leave too much to the child. They give
the child too much leeway, because even in elementary they send a note
home to the parent. Well, some parents gets it and some parents, some of
them don't. It's according to what the note is about. The child might
deliver it, and they might not deliver it, because my grandson did that
to his mom. When he was in third or fourth grade the teacher sent a note
home. He claimed he forgot it, but you know, it was bad news. He never
gave it to his mother, but at least the teacher made back up and called
her. That's how she knew, but a lot of times they don't. They just send
a note, and the kids that need the most is the ones that the parents do
less. The teacher used to tell me that. She says, "Every time I look
around I'm looking at you." She said, "On top of that, you're at every
PTA meeting and everything else that's going on." She said, "But the
parents that we really need to see, they don't come." She said, "We send
them letters to come, but we never see them. They drop the kid off at
the beginning of school and don't see them no more." Maybe the

[laughter]

that something's going on. You need to be visible at least twice
a week. You don't have to go to the classroom, but just be visible
around the school because the other kids are going to tell your kids,
"Boy, you'd better be careful because there's

[laughter]

mama down the hall. Your mama's down
there." Not that you're down there, but that's the way they put it. It
lets the child know, "I'd better stay on my P's and Q's because if I
don't she's going to find out."

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Right. Well, the other children that you raised, the other six that you
raised were younger that the two that graduated in sixty-eight,
sixty-nine in that era so you've brought up children through the
post-integration school system as well.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Yeah.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Yeah.

WILLA ROBINSON:

And all of them was in the integrated schools.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Tell me before we have to leave this, tell me about how you and some of
the other members of the black community reacted to what Indians were
doing in the early '70s to fight integration. What do you feel like
motivated that, and how did you react to it at the time?

WILLA ROBINSON:

Well, to me—you want me to be honest, don't you?

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Yeah, well sure. If you're comfortable being honest.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Most of those around Maxton really they did not want the integration.
They felt that what schools they had, they had done it on their own
without the help of the state, and that they should not have to deal
with whites or blacks. That was their thoughts, that, "they didn't care
whether we had an education or not. Up to a point we worked together and
built us a school here or a school there. Now they want to take our
school and put everybody in it." They didn't feel like it was fair. My
question to them was, "Well, it can't be integrated unless we include
everybody. Why do you want to stick out there like
a sore thumb? If we're going to do it we need to all do it." But they
thought no. They didn't think they should.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

They didn't think they should have to

WILLA ROBINSON:

Nuh-huh.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Was it just racism, do you think, or was there something else behind it?

WILLA ROBINSON:

I wouldn't say it was a lot of racism. I think it was, "You're invading
my territory." Like with the college when North Carolina came in and
says, "You're going to be a part of the system so we're going to make
you North Carolina College at Pembroke," North Carolina University at
Pembroke. "They're taking over our schools, and I don't think it's
fair." There was a lot of kind of feedback on that. And as I say, it
wasn't to a point of really going at each other's throat. It was just
mostly conversation. How do you feel about it? How do I feel about it.
Then you tell me how you feel, and I tell you how I feel. That was it.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Well, it's interesting. It seems like I notice a theme as I interview
people that mostly people accepted that integration was going to happen.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Um-hum.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

One way or the other. Maybe that's because it had been really delayed
here for such a long time.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Yeah.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

People kept trying not to make it an issue, and then finally, well, it's
got to be an issue, and there's really nothing we can do about it. But
since everybody knew it was coming they had conversations, and back and
forth about how it was going to happen, or how is it best going to
benefit me? But then in the Indian community, as you know, there was sort of a core group of people that did everything
they could to really stop it.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Yeah.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

But even then, they couldn't. It couldn't happen. Was there a lot of
violence, racial violence in Maxton during this time period that you
remember, either white/black, Indian/white, Indian/black?

WILLA ROBINSON:

No. Nuh-huh.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

I must ask because I read a newspaper article the other day about Red
Springs. There was a fight. I think it was 1969 or 68 maybe, a fight
between black and white boys, and some window smashing, and things like
that. It seemed pretty isolated.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Yeah. There wasn't a lot of fighting and tearing up things. The major
thing that happened in Maxton, they just burned the school down, and
nobody ever figured out why.

[laughter]

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Well, right. When you put it that way it's like, "What on earth?" But
when people's passions are aroused, as you said, they can do all kinds
of crazy things.

WILLA ROBINSON:

When you think about it, as I said before, my thoughts was the child is
sitting around listening to mom and dad talk about this, that, blah,
blah, blah, you know. And they may be all het up about the integration,
that they really don't want it, and blah, blah, blah, so they figures,
"Well, what the heck. If that's how they feel we'll just go burn down
the school." Maybe their thoughts was, "Then they won't have nowhere to
go."

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Right.

WILLA ROBINSON:

"If they're not happy where they're going, then we'll fix it so they
won't have nowhere to go." That's just thoughts, you know.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

It backfired on them.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Because kids usually get the wrong idea when parents say a lot of things
around them. I feel like that, even today, causes a lot of our young
people to still have prejudices because their parents are prejudiced,
and they talk about these things before these children, and maybe they
don't even mean it in the sense, but a child sees it in a different
light.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Sure.

WILLA ROBINSON:

Or, they could be just angry with a person in another race for some
other reason, but they call them out of their name, and the child right
away says, "Oh, he don't like so-and-so. They're against my father.
They're against my mother," and get the wrong idea. So it's not always
racism. Sometimes it's just misunderstanding.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Yeah. It's amazing how it gets transferred from generation to
generation.

WILLA ROBINSON:

That's true. That's true.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Is there anything that I've not asked you about that you feel like you
want to say, or any particular thing that you feel like you helped
accomplish during this time period that you want to talk about?

WILLA ROBINSON:

No, I can't at this moment think of anything. I'll tell you what, if I
do think of something else I'll call you.